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Washington Sundar has unbelievable composure and temperament: Ravi Shastri

India all-rounder Washington Sundar has certainly played some crucial role in India’s winning campaign against Australia and England in the Test fixtures in a brief career with the side. 

Sundar scored 96* against England in the first innings of the fourth and final Test that India went on to win by an innings and 25 runs eventually in Ahmedabad. The win helped India clinch the series 3-1 and march into the finals of the WTC that would be played against New Zealand in June. 

Head coach Ravi Shastri has praised the left-hander’s batting ability. “Washington Sundar has far more natural ability than I had. I think he should be batting in top-four for his state, there is no question about that. I think he should be batting in the top four, he is good enough and he belongs there. At the same time, if he can focus on his bowling, India would have a very good number six in the future. Somebody who could get you a 60-70 and then bowl for you. That was my role at number six, and I think he can do the same role and even better,” said Shastri during a virtual press conference on Sunday.

Shastri further went on to say that Sundar has “unbelievable composure and temperament”. “Sundar has unbelievable composure and temperament. For someone, who was an opening batsman during the U-19 days but to see that kind of body langugage, unfazed by the best bowlers in the world during the toughest situations, as in Brisbane and Chennai. It was unreal, this innings in the fourth Test is even better than Brisbane because you are playing at home and you have a World Championship on the line. 50 adrift from the opposition and you are batting with Pant, yes you have Axar to come in next but your objective is to get closer to 205.”

“These youngsters are not thinking of that, they are playing normal and fearless cricket. They are playing free cricket, and then they went on to get 360,” he added.





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It allowed players to open themselves to their colleagues: Shastri on bio-bubble

India thumped England by an innings and 25 runs in the fourth and final Test in Ahmedabad to win the series 3-1. The win also took India into the finals of the World Test Championship. They will now lock horns with New Zealand in the title clash in June. While the Indian team had performed exceptionally well making strong comebacks both against Australia and England after losing the first match of the Test series, head coach Ravi Shastri in a virtual press conference talked about bio-bubble and how the players have been dealing with it. “There is no choice, there are restricted team areas, so you can’t go out, meet anyone and the same exists now,” Shastri said at a virtual press conference “So if you want to get out of the room, go into a team area, where you meet other players, so what it’s done basically is, it has made players meet each other more often after playing hours. And when you meet more often, somewhere down the line there will be conversations regarding the game,” the head coach added. The head coach said that whenever the players met during this time, they only had the option of talking about the game which eventually helped them and they also understood each other well. “So, I think the best thing that has happened is talking cricket amongst the team members and they had no choice, so they were forced to do it and that’s been a big help,” he said. “They have gotten to understand each others’ background, mental state, where they come from, where they are in life, settled, unsettled.” “It allowed them to open themselves to their colleagues a lot more, discuss personal issues, you know more freely, win more trust from the team members, a lot of positives like you mentioned because of this bubble,” he said. Shastri mentioned about the Australia tour and how the team made some strong statements during the course. The former India player further added that he knew the players would take time to come into the groove as they haven’t got out of their houses for a long time. “You had to be patient more than anything else. We started with two losses in Australia in ODIs. In normal circumstances, you can get straight to the point. You can be aggressive, you can make the most painful point with an individual and he’ll pull up his socks,” added 58-year-old Shastri. “But I had made up my mind with my team management that we’re going to show empathy because for six months, a lot of the guys had not got out of their flats. No one lives in farms in India, some do, some don’t.” Hailing the team, Shastri said that the team takes “pride” in winning and give it all when the players are out in the middle. “This team takes pride in winning, this team doesn’t mind losing as long as they throw punches, so it was just a matter of being patient for that one switch of that result and it happened in the third ODI game (in Australia) through some brilliance from Hardik (Pandya) and Jaddu (Ravindra Jadeja) and then you didn’t look back,” he signed off.

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IND vs ENG: 3 best innings that shaped the outcome of a riveting series

The recently concluded Test series between India and England ended with the hosts India dismantling all the promises and high level of performances that the tourists had offered at the start of the series. The hosts were high on their incredible achievement in Australia where they had trumped Australians in their own backyard, and England defeated in the first game of the series to ensure the expectations from them were to only increase in the series. After the defeat in the first Test, Indian team management decided to neutralise the effects of toss and hence pitches that supported spin from the first day of the game were produced in the series, except for the last game, when the curators at the Narendra Modi Stadium was under pressure for the third Test that lasted only one and a half days. As the pitches were challenging, the onus was on batsmen from either side to bring their teams in the game before bowlers could mount pressure on the opposition. Here we are enlisting the three best innings by batsmen from either side in the series Rohit Sharma- 161- 1st innings, second Test, Chennai Coming into the second Test, Rohit Sharma was under enormous pressure following two low scores in the first Test, and the subsequent heavy loss the team faced in the first game. The pitch was not perfect for Rohit, who relies on the pace on the ball to score runs, and deliveries were turning square from the first ball. He saw Shubman Gill who looked in terrific touch in the first Test departing after misjudging a ball even before he could get his eye in. Rohit looked like a man on a mission and had a clear vision on how he wanted to score runs and at the same time, how he wanted to defend the spin twins of Jack Leach and Moeen Ali. Leach had dismissed him in the first Test with a one that turned past his outside edge to hit the stumps, and Rohit made sure the left-arm spinner was not allowed to settle in his rhythm to produce such jaffas again. All other batsmen struggled to cope up with the raging turn that the pitch was offering, and Rohit had seen his partners in Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli—who are considered champion players of spin bowling getting dismissed in either too defensive or too aggressive modes, and hence Rohit mixed caution with aggression. He went right back in his crease to defend whenever spinners allowed him a bit of space, while his main scoring shot was sweep which was employed perfectly by England batsmen in the previous game. The bounce on that pitch was not true, but lack of variations in pace by England spinners was spotted fairly early by Rohit and put them away en route to a superlative century. His reluctance to come forward forced spinners to bowl full at him and he jumped down the track to hit them over the top. For the most part of his innings, Rohit appeared to be batting on a different surface than the other batsmen including Joe Roots and Virat Kohli. Rohit silenced his critics with that century that could well be a career-defining century and will not be forgotten by fans as an innings f highest order on a raging turner. Rishabh Pant- 1st innings, Fourth Test, Ahmedabad Rishabh Pant had emerged as one of the most prominent heroes of Indian cricket on the tour of Australia with two swashbuckling knocks to rattle the home side. However, there were scepticisms about his wicketkeeping and hence it was a tough call for the Virat Kohli-led team management o back him on Indian pitches that will test his skills behind the wickets against high-quality spinners. Pant’s run-scoring and match-winning abilities were too much to overlook and he got the backing from the team management. He was fluent and aggressive to start off the series and played some handy knock, but like the best of batsmen, had kept his best for the final game of the series when a place in the World Test Championship Final was at stake for his team. On the second day of the final Test, the Indian batting order was on the verge of yet another collapse as all batsmen failed to rise to the occasion in front of a disciplined England bowling attack. Anderson was whopping the ball around, while Stokes was into his heroics with the ball. The score was around 150-6 when Pant was joined by Washington Sundar, leaving only Axar Patel with some batting credentials to bail India out of trouble. Pant was not defensive due to the situation and took calculative risks against Joe Root to put England skipper, who had taken a sensation fifer in the last game under some sort fo pressure, and to push the fielders back. His ploy worked and he could rotate strike easily with Washington. England were playing a bowler a short and one of the four men tasked with bowling was not feeling comfortable on the ground. In his mind, Pant had all of that sorted, and he knew the intensity from the bowlers will dip at some point, and he curbed his go-all out attitude to wait for that moment. Root got flummoxed at the moment and he asked Stokes to bowl just before the second new ball and that left only Anderson with some energy left while bowling with the new ball. As soon as Anderson ran in with the new SG ball, the transformation of a calm Pant into the Pant all know was quick as he danced down the track to hit Anderson over his head for a four to send the signal to Root that it was him who was dictating terms and not the pacer. He dished out similar treatment to Ben Stokes in the next over and a nearly-exhausted Stokes could only offer a wry smile in appreciation of Pant’s brilliance. If getting hit over the top was not enough for Anderson, in the next over, Pant reverse scooped him over the crowded slip cordon to stamp his authority on the game and state that he has arrived on the stage to rewrite the laws with the audacity to scoop one of the finest pacer that the game has ever produced. He went quickly after scoring the century in a big relief to England, but by then, he had done enough harm to the fighting spirit of the England team and it was all exemplified in the helpless nod Anderson gave after the reverse scoop over the slips. Joe Root- 218, 1st innings, First Test, Chennai England were triumphant in Sri Lanka, but the challenge of taking on India, who were over the moon after Australia win was a monumental one for Joe Root’s men. Root was in colossal form with the bat in the two-match Test series against Sri Lanka and had scores in excess of 200 and 180 on pitches that supported spin bowling from the word go. Root was aware of the challenges his teammates were to face, and hence his own form was crucial for England’s success against India. Luckily for him and his side, he won the first toss of the series and ecstatically decided to bat first on a pitch that was later rated as flat as a road. The openers gave him a perfect platform to start off the series, and Root knew the only way India could have been put under pressure was to score a big first-innings run and he put his head down for one of the best innings he has ever played in his eight-year-long career. Root also knew India did not have the accuracy of Ravindra Jadeja and hence the onus was on Ashwin in his absence. He was confident of his game against the other two Indian spinners in Shahbaz Nadeem and Washington Sundar and started taking the game to them. He played with their minds and unleashed both the conventional and reverse sweep to unsettle their lengths. None of them could rise to the challenge and the pitch as flat as it was, did not offer them any assistance to fall back to, and Root kept on coming at them in pursuit of big runs. There was not much help for pacers either, but Ishant Sharma and Jasprit Bumrah found some swing with the older ball, but till then, Root had got his eyes in at the crease and on the big, first innings total to mount pressure on India. Once he got comfortable with other bowlers, the task of unsettling Ashwin was also on as the off-spinner kept on searching for some sort of help from the surface. Root stopped only after completing his double century that left India so far behind the game. Root would be disappointed he could not carry on with his form and could not score any more fifty in the series after that quality double hundred, but pragmatically, his innings in the first Test sent panic into the Indian set up and hence they thought of taking the toss out of equations without and out turners in the next two games. The two sides will meet against each other once again later this year in English summer when they will be pitted against the swing and seam bowling skills of each other.

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Nissanka rewarded for consistency, gets maiden Test call up for Sri Lanka

Pathum Nissanka, the emerging Sri Lanka batting talent has found a place in the Island nation’s Test side that will face West Indies in a two-match series. Dimuth Karunaratne has returned from injury to captain both the Test as well as the ODI teams on this tour of the Caribbean. Nissanka, apart from piling up ranks in the domestic cricket also played two sensible innings in the last two T20I games scoring 39 off 34 and 37 of 23. The 22-year-old has already played 33 First-Class games, having debuted at the tender age of 17 in 2016. A consistent performer in first-class cricket, Nissanka has scored 3445 runs at an astonishing average of 67.54 and has 13 centuries in his kitty. Apart from skipper Karunaratne, Dhananjaya de Silva too has recovered from injury and is now returning to competitive cricket with this Test series. Both Karunaratne and de Silva got injured during Sri Lanka’ tour of South Africa. Lahiru Kumara, the senior-most fast bowler has not been able to make it to this series after testing positive for Covid-19, days before the team’s departure to Windies. The Test series begins on March 21 at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua. Test squad: Dimuth Karunaratne (capt), Dasun Shanaka, Pathum Nissanka, Oshada Fernando, Lahiru Thirimanne, Dinesh Chandimal, Angelo Mathews, Niroshan Dickwella, Roshen Silva, Dhananjaya de Silva, Wanindu Hasaranga, Ramesh Mendis, Vishwa Fernando, Suranga Lakmal, Asitha Fernando, Dushmantha Chameera, Lasith Embuldeniya